32 F.2d 879 | 9th Cir. | 1929
The plaintiffs below, Webb Jay and Stewart-Warner Speedometer Corporation, are respectively the owner of and exclusive licensee under patent No. 1,132,273, granted to Jay March 16, 1915. The patent is for what is commonly known as a vacuum tank fuel feed for automobiles. The complaint alleges infringement thereof, particularly of claims 9 and 14, by the defendants, in their manufacture and sale of what is referred to as the Simplex vacuum feed covered by patent No. 1,662,282, issued March 13, 1928. Prom an interlocutory decree adjudging the validity of plaintiffs’ patent and its infringement, and directing an' accounting, defendants appeal.
As distinguished from gravity and pressure systems, the vacuum feed consists of means by which the gasoline is drawn by suction from the main tank, generally carried at the rear end of the car, to a small supply tank located near to and higher than the carburetor, from which under divers controls it flows uniformly and continuously to the
UNITED STATESIn the decisions above cited, as well as in the more recent case of Jay v. Ireland & Matthews Mfg. Co. (D. C.) 280 F. 166, claims 9 and 14 of the plaintiffs’ patent were held valid. These decisions are well considered and the reasoning is for the most part highly persuasive, two of them are by courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction, and in point of neither fact nor law does the record before us exhibit anything new of substance. Without discussion, therefore, we hold the claims to be valid. Mast, Foos & Co. v. Stover Mfg. Co., 177 U. S. 485, 20 S. Ct. 708, 44 L. Ed. 856; Cookingham v. Warren Bros. Co. (C. C. A.) 3 F.(2d) 899. Indeed, while defendants do not concede that these cases were rightly decided and challenge the validity of the patent, the contention they more elaborately and earnestly press is that in view of the prior art, as recognized in the decisions and exhibited by the instant record, if the Jay patent is not void for anticipation, at least its claims must be restricted to a narrow range, and, so restricted, they are not infringed by the Simplex feed.
As technically stated, the claims are as , follows:
“9. The combination with an explosive engine of a fuel supply tank located below the plane of the engine intake; a fuel supply receptacle located in a plane above that of said tank; a conduit leading from said tank to said supply receptacle; an auxiliary receptacle into which fuel flows from said supply receptacle; a conduit for supplying fuel from said auxiliary receptacle to the engine; exhaust means for reducing the pressure in said supply receptacle below that of the atmosphere; means for alternately connecting said supply receptacle with the exhaust means and with the atmosphere, and means controlling communication between said liquid supply receptacle and said auxiliary receptacle, adapted to be opened by a gravity flow from said supply to said auxiliary receptacle.”
“14. In combination with a main low-level liquid supply tank; a liquid supply receptacle located in a plane above said tank; and auxiliary receptacle into which the liquid flows from said first receptacle; a conduit leading from the auxiliary receptacle for discharge by gravity therefrom; means for producing a partial vacuum in said first receptacle; means for alternately connecting said first receptacle with said exhausting means and with the atmosphere; a cheek valve which controls the communication between said first mentioned receptacle and said auxiliary receptacle, opening by pressure of the liquid in the first mentioned receptacle, and a pipe communicating with said auxiliary receptacle and extending to a point above the high liquid level in the first receptacle and open to atmospheric pressure, for maintaining- atmospheric pressure in said supplemental receptacle.”
Undoubtedly these claims may be fully read upon the Simplex with the possible exception of the means for controlling the flow of the liquid from the upper to the lower chamber of the tank. It will be noted that in claim 9 the upper chamber is designated as the “supply receptacle” and the lower chamber as “an auxiliary receptacle,” and the element in question is described as “means for controlling communication” between the two “adapted to be opened by a gravity flow from the one to the other.” In claim 14 this means is referred to as a “cheek valve * * * opening by pressure of the liquid in the” supply receptacle. In the commercial form of plaintiffs’ device the communicating duet, upon entering the lower chamber, is turned’
As already suggested, the patent in suit is for a combination and neither party rests any argument upon the difference in type of the two valves employed. Both valves are common and well-known forms of check valves, and, as was said by the court below, “open by gravity in the direction of the flow of the fuel. They perform the same function in substantially the same way, and accomplish the same result, and therefore in the sense of the patent law are the same thing.” While Jay’s invention cannot be accorded a broad scope, it constituted a distinct advance in the art, entitling him to a reasonable range of equivalents. “Where a combination patent makes a distinct advance in the art to which it relates, as does the appellants invention here, the term ‘mechanical equivalent’ should have a reasonably broad and generous interpretation.” Smith Cannery Mach. Co. v. Seattle-Astoria Iron Works (C. C. A.) 261 F. 85. “We have repeatedly held that a charge of infringement is sometimes made out, though the letter of the claims be avoided.” Westinghouse v. Boyden Power-Brake Co., 170 U. S. 537, 568, 18 S. Ct. 707, 722 (42 L. Ed. 1136). See also Hoyt v. Horne, 145 U. S. 302, 308, 12 S. Ct. 922, 36 L. Ed. 713; Kings County Raisin & Fruit Co. v. U. S. Consol. Seeding Raisin Co. (C. C. A.) 182 F. 59; Los Angeles Lime Co. v. Nye (C. C. A.) 270 F. 155; Metallic Extraction Co. v. Brown (C. C. A.) 104 F. 345.
Though sustaining the validity of plaintiff’s patent in the Weinberg Case, 250 F. 469, Judge Sanborn held that it was not infringed by the Weinberg device, and pointed out as one of the differentiating features the normally open check valve in the latter. And defendants argue that if that distinction operated to avoid infringement there, the fact that their valve is normally open should by parity of reasoning be held equally effectual here. Just what significance Judge Sanborn attached to this distinction is not made dear. Apparently he regarded as of controlling importance another feature of the Weinberg
“Q. Now assuming that the gasoline has all fallen, or all passed from the upper chamber down into the lower chamber, and the automobile is not running, so there is no suction on it, this valve would hang open, so if there was an expansion of gasoline in the lower chamber due to heat, that expansion could be relieved by an upper passage of vapor through that normally open valve into the upper chamber, could it not? A. Yes, that is right.
“Q. That of course could never occur with the Simplex? A. Gould never occur with the Simplex, nor with the Webb Jay.”
Upon the whole we are persuaded that the lower court was right in holding the claims infringed, and therefore the decree will be affirmed.